Magazine Data Page 371 |
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NeophyteCountry: US
Fanzine.
Editors: William Rotsler |
NeotropeCountry: USTotal Issues: 2
Annual featuring progressive fiction.
Publishers: P.O. Box 172, Lawrence, KS 66044 (in 2000 - 2002) Editors: Adam Powell & Paul Silvia (in 2000 - 2002) Frequency: annual Mentioned in: O. Henry Awards Website (in 2002) |
Nero Wolfe Mystery MagazineCountry: USTotal Issues: 3
A short-lived reprint digest magazine, featuring an introduction by Rex Stout, a Nero Wolfe novella, ten reputable short stories, and a crossword in each issue.
Editors: Rex Stout (nominally) Formats: digest Prices: 35c Pagecounts: 144pp Frequency: bimonthly Mentioned in: Ultimate Guide to the Pulps, Mystery, Detective, and Espionage Magazines |
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NerveCountry: US
Print spinoff of the Web site, which sometimes features additional fiction. Features literate erotica.
Publishers: 520 Broadway, Sixth Floor, New York, NY 10012 (in 2002) Editors: Susan Dominus (in 2002) Frequency: 6 issues per year Mentioned in: O. Henry Awards Website (in 2002) |
Nerve GardensCountry: UKTotal Issues: 2
Fanzine.
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NeurologyCountry: US
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NeuroticaCountry: USTotal Issues: 9
A small, independent magazine about the relationship between neurosis and art and literature. Neurotica published some of the first works by Kerouac, Ginsberg, Marshall McLuhan, and many others. Although primarily a poetry magazine, it did publish the occasional piece of ficition. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersNeurotica Publishing Company, St. Louis, 1948 (moved to New York in 1950)EditorsPrices50c (in 1950) |
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NeveraryCountry: USTotal Issues: 8
Amateur online magazine.
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NeverworldsCountry: US
Online magazine.
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NewCountry: US
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New AcornCountry: UKTotal Issues: 1
Selected short stories by contemporary authors.
Editors: H. Bagust Formats: digest Prices: 1/- Pagecounts: 79pp |
The New Adventures of FrankensteinCountry: USTotal Issues: 11
Editors: Dennis J. Druktenis Formats: 8" x 10" Prices: $7.00 Pagecounts: 68pp |
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The New AgeCountry: UK
Founded as a left-liberal "Weekly Record of Culture, Social Service, and Literary Life," it had little impact until taken over by A.R. Orage in 1907 (with financial backing from George Bernard Shaw and others). Primarily a vehicle for essays and criticism, it published some fiction, notably the early short stories of Katherine Mansfield. Orage's interests turned to mysticism, and after his departure from the paper in 1922 it declined. Issues & Index Sources
PublishersFrank Palmer, LondonEditorsFormatstabloidFrequencyweeklyMentioned in: British Literary Magazines Vol. 3 Online SourcesOnline Books |
New All-Action StoriesCountry: UK
A loosely-connected series of thin pulps that were (mainly) numbered sequentially
but varied between detective, romance and westerns, at least, and each of
which had a different title. The series "title" was never listed in the table of
contents, but was mentioned in advertisements for "other titles in the series".
Formats: small pulp (5.25" x 8"); pulp (6" x 9") Prices: 1/-; 9d Pagecounts: 96pp; 64pp |
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New AmericaCountry: US
Issues & Index Sources
PublishersNational League for American Citizenship, 405 Lexington Ave., New YorkEditorsHarold Fields |
New American Review [1967]Country: USTotal Issues: 26
Called 'The Magazine of New Writing' from #16, it was equally a regular anthology series. Authors include Philip Roth, Louise Gluck, John Ashbery, Ted Hughes, John Barth, Donald Barthelme, E.L. Doctorow, Robert Coover. See selection Many Windows ed. Ted Solotaroff (Harper & Row, 1983) Issues & Index Sources
PublishersNAL/Signet to #10 (1970); Simon & Schuster to #15 (1972), then BantamEditorsTheodore SolotaroffFormatshardcover with paperback reprintFrequencythrice yearly but twice yearly from 1975 (#22) |
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